Sunday, December 15, 2013

Hal Borland is one of my favorite authors. He lived a mere five or six miles from my home but I didn't find that out until he passed away. I often walk down the dirt road where his farm is located, trying to see what he saw through his eyes and through his words. My Sunday morning writing partner is also a Borland admirer. Here's her prompt for today's effort.

Balancing the Year.

"The short days are upon
us. It will be another week before the Winter solstice, but the day's change
now is slight. Daylight, sunrise to sunset, will shorten only another two
minutes or so before it begins to lengthen. The evening change, in fact, has
already begun; the year's earliest sunset is past; but sunrise will continue to
lag on through the year's end....We come to a long Winter night when the moon
rides full over a white world and the darkness thins away. For the full-moon night
is as long as the longest day of Summer, and the snowy world gleams and glows
with an incandescent shimmer.

Year to year, we remember
the short days, but we tend to forget the long nights when the moon rides high
over a cold and brittle-white world. Not only the moon nights, but the star
nights, when it seems one can stand on a hilltop and touch the Dipper. Who
would not cut wood and burn a candle for a few such nights a year?" - Hal
Borland, Sundial of the Seasons, Dec 16

PROMPT: Have a conversation with Hal, responding to his statements.

My Conversation
with Hal

Hal. The short days are upon
us.

Me. I’ve been noticing. I
sit with my book of an afternoon or I glance out the kitchen window and
darkness is swallowing the blue so I check the clock and it’s only 3:45 and I
think, “Already?” Of course full dark doesn’t descend until 4:45 or so but the
daylight gives way to dusk far earlier at this time of year. The earliest
sunset was on December 8th, almost two weeks before the solstice.

H.
It will be another week
before the Winter solstice, but the day's change now is slight. Daylight,
sunrise to sunset, will shorten only another two minutes or so before it begins
to lengthen.

M. And that’s why this is
my favorite time of year. The change is negligible but consistent – it’s more
than hopeful, it’s a certainty that the earth is turning once again toward
spring.

H. The evening change, in
fact, has already begun; the year's earliest sunset is past; but sunrise will
continue to lag on through the year's end....

M. …and that’s okay with
me. I like to waken in the predawn hours and watch the light spread across the
sky. Even on snowy days like today, the light creeps up the edges of the earth
and spills in my window.

H. We come to a long Winter
night when the moon rides full over a white world and the darkness thins away.
For the full-moon night is as long as the longest day of Summer, and the snowy
world gleams and glows with an incandescent shimmer.

M. I’ve been out of doors
on such nights when the earth seems to hold its breath and the only sounds are
of my own breathing and the pulse of my own warm blood. I walk the moonpath
then, ever watchful for night creatures – owl, fox, coyote. Only once have I
seen an owl, ghostly, silent, gliding from its perch in a tree I passed.

H. Year to year, we
remember the short days, but we tend to forget the long nights when the moon
rides high over a cold and brittle-white world.

M. Not all of us forget.
You don’t. I don’t. There are times I would have been happy to meet you in the
cold stillness and stand looking across the moonlit snow, knowing that this was
as right as the longest of summer days, this time of rest, of dormancy, of
renewal.

H. Not only the moon nights,
but the star nights, when it seems one can stand on a hilltop and touch the
Dipper. Who would not cut wood and burn a candle for a few such nights a year?

M.There is a sharp
satisfaction in being both inside and outside on such nights. The cold is
bracing, shivery, even cruel. To return to the warmth of a house where a fire
burns and a candle stirs the darkness is to know heaven in two realms.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

The snow is coming gently down, as though someone aloft was shaking a feather pillow. Small gusts of wind whirl it up and around and it settles again on the ground, on the fence posts, on tree branches and the backs of the juncoes waiting their turn at the feeder. The hundreds of geese that peppered the surface of the pond just a couple of weeks ago have fled south ahead of the cold and the snow. The mornings belong now to the jay and the crow and the silence that even their strident calls can't shatter.

This is the hunkering down time of year, when everything that lives seeks shelter or stands stoically against the winds. I walk the snowbound meadows and see the bones of last summer's flowers - the delicate brown cups of Queen Anne's lace, the empty seedpods of the milkweed, the delicate stems of long dead asters. There is beauty in austerity if you look for it, and colors that are overshadowed by summer's riotous shades - the buff and fawn of spent grasses, the muted scarlet of red dogwood osier and blackberry canes, the rich mahogany of oak leaves, the greeny-black of pines and firs.

To know the land when it is quiet, to see the promise of spring in the tightly held buds already set but sleeping, is to know hope.

Sunday, December 08, 2013

The hemlocks grew behind the left corner of the house. Sadly I have no photo of them.

Most Sunday mornings I write with a friend. She provides the prompts, we write for half an hour, then read our efforts to one another over the phone. The prompt today was taken from John Hay's writings regarding a tree he grew up with.(A Beginner’s Faith in
Things Unseen: “Fire in the Plants”)

One afternoon when I was five my father called
my brother and sisters and me out to the back yard. It was really
two yards divided by a stone wall with a rose arbor. The cesspool was also
located out there so summertime found two vastly different scents competing for
our attention.

On this day dad stood at the corner where rose
garden and cesspool occupied the same bit of earth. Four small hemlock
trees surrounded him. “Pick a tree,” he sang out, his face one big smile. My
mother often accused him of being less than a landsman – he’d grown up in New
Rochelle, NY; he was a city boy, after all – and being surrounded by farmers on
all sides made him a bit defensive. He decided to prove his worth as a country
man by planting trees for his children, trees that would grace the corner of
the yard for years after we’d all grown and gone.

One by one we held our trees straight as Dad
shoveled dirt over the roots. My brother’s tree was tucked directly into the
corner of our property, mine stood slightly tilted next to his with the twins’
trees crowding close to avoid getting their feet wet in the murk of the
cesspool.

My mother came out to inspect the proceedings.
She was a city girl herself but her own mother had been born and raised on a
farm. Mama knew a thing or two about gardening. “I don’t know, Jay,” she said,
shaking her head. "Those trees are awfully close to the cesspool. Plants don’t
like human excrement.”

The cesspool had always been a bone of
contention between my parents. In the 40s, when they married and moved to the
house my city-escaping Granddad had called his summer home, the modern leech
field had not been in existence. Instead, a long pipe led from the house to the
far reaches of the back yard where the effluent collected in a scum-covered
pool before sinking into the surrounding earth. Though it was barely visible
behind its shield of tall, rank grasses, it stunk in high summer when the air
was hot and still. Only the roses planted in great sweeping pink swaths offered the nose any comfort.

My mother’s observation made us children
anxious. We’d interrupted our play to help Dad plant our very own trees and in
the space of half an hour had become very possessive of them. “They’ll grow
just fine,” my father assured us, waving his hand at the surrounding woods to
make his point. “Look at all those trees. They don’t mind a little sh… .”
Intercepting a black look from my mother, he didn’t finish the word.

“It,” my brother muttered under his breath and
scampered off, brandishing the wooden sword he’d been threatening my sisters
with before Dad had summoned us. We whooped after him, leaping the lowest of
the rose bushes that separated the two yards.

Those trees did grow, but slowly. In my teen
years the branches of my tree were finally high enough off the ground to
shelter me and on those days when hiding was a stronger urge than dodging the
awful smell of the cesspool, I would take a book or my sketchpad and crawl
under its sheltering branches. In winter I loved trying to sneak under the
branches without disturbing the snow so that when I looked up, it was like
being in the Snow Queen’s castle.

One by one my siblings and I left the home
place for college and new lives but every time I returned I took time to visit
my tree. The cesspool was filled in by then, replaced by a holding tank. I
brought my first born to the back yard to play under the hemlocks and then the
other children as they arrived. We had picnics there and built tiny houses of
fallen twigs. Often we’d bring a book and I’d read aloud. Stories read in the
company of trees seem more real somehow.

The trees grew for twenty-five years. Their
spires reached high into the blue. I noticed a few bare spots here and there on
the branches, accentuating the brown needles that still clung to the branches
but it was a warning I missed. Several months later, a letter from home brought
the news of my father’s illness. I returned in time to say goodbye and before
leaving, stumbled out to the back yard to seek solace under my tree. I stood
beneath its branches and looked up. Only then did I realize that my tree was
dying, too. In fact, all four hemlocks were turning brown, their needles
falling in sad puddles on the ground.

The summer following my father’s death, all
four trees had to be cut down. My mother and I stood watching with tears in our
eyes. Taking my hand she turned to me and said, “I’m glad I was wrong about
these trees. Your father would always point them out to me when I had doubts
about something.”

The home place has gone out of the family now.
The rose bushes are gone, too, and many of the trees that surrounded the house
of my childhood. But in my mind’s eye, those four hemlocks we planted with my
father so long ago rise up out of the corner of the yard, growing between the
roses and the cesspool, proof that life finds its own way to flourish despite
unfavorable conditions, despite our doubts.